Neo-Pentecostalism
A Post-Colonial Critique of the Prosperity Gospel in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Foreword by Brian Stanley
Imprint: Wipf and Stock
Nelson Kalombo Ngoy, a scholar of Mission, Evangelism, and World Christian Studies, obtained a PhD at Southwestern Baptist Seminary, Roy Fish School of Evangelism and Missions, a Masters of Divinity and a Masters of Sacred Theology from Drew University, a Masters of Art Intercultural Studies from Asbury Theological Seminary, and is a PhD candidate in Theology and Religion at the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom. Prior to pursuing graduate studies in the United States, Ngoy is a recipient of a Bachelors of Divinity at the Université Méthodiste of Katanga in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and a Bachelors of Theological Studies at Africa University in Zimbabwe. Dr. Ngoy has presented academic papers at Bicentennial United Methodist conference on “Colonialism and Empire in Mission” and at Yale-Edinburgh conference on “World Christianity.” Also, he has served churches in the United States and Africa.
“Nelson Ngoy’s Neo-Pentecostalism is a major contribution to the study of mission, religion, and cultural integration in Central Africa. The book is exhaustive in its research and comprehensive in its approach. It succeeds in weaving together the many strands of history, indigenous African religious belief, contemporary social chaos, and religious fervor.”
—Katherine C. Hill-Miller, Professor of English, Dean of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Long Island University, New York 2002–2015
“The author speaks from a deep place of prophetic anguish, arguing that African Pentecostalism has lost its way and sold its soul to the prosperity gospel and late capitalism. Ngoy, nonetheless, offers key insights on how to turn the situation around for the good of the kingdom of God.”
—Nimi Wariboko, Boston University, author of Nigerian Pentecostalism
“Neo-Pentecostalism deserves a reading in part because it presents a minority report/stance on contested matters regarding postcolonial Christian self-understandings and the relationship between syncretism and contextualization in majority world contexts but especially since it is one of the few African voices to extend—rather than be apologetic about—the Western argument from three to four decades ago that the prosperity message in that continent was imported from North America.”
—Amos Yong, Fuller Seminary